"Angels in America",
a recent cover story of the popular US magazine People, describes how
the lives of several individuals were changed by what they consider
divine intervention.

Six-year-old Hilary
Russell of Miami Beach, Florida, was caught in a riptide on a blustery
winter day in 1978. Her parents thought for certain she was going to
drown, but her father, Richard, suddenly noticed a dark-haired man of
about 30 standing near Hilary. The stranger "just plucked her out of
the water and held her in his arms," Richard says. Hilary recalls that
the man was tanned, "and the hair on his arms was dark, and it glistened,
even though it was cloudy out." Hilary's mother was astonished by the
"effortless" way the man strode through the waves, which reached only
to his chest although he seemed to be in deeper. Back on shore, the
man put Hilary in Susan's arms. Susan thanked the man. "I remember him
saying, 'That's okay,' and he was smiling," Richard says. With Hilary
safe, Richard and Susan embraced -- but when they looked back, the man
was gone.

As Gary Forner
plunged down the sheer face of a coastal cliff at Cape Disappointment,
Washington, on 30 August 1994 he thought he was going to die. But about
30 or 40 feet down the 90-foot drop the veteran park ranger's fall was
suddenly halted as he felt something pushing him against the rock face.
"It was definitely the hand of God or an angel," says Forner, who had
set out with three volunteers to save a stranded climber. "Right on
my sternum, I could feel this tremendous force pushing me back. Suddenly
I felt an incredible warmth right over my heart. Like when you're a
kid, and you get hurt, and your mom or dad pick you up and cuddle you.
All I could think was: 'Sweet Jesus, thank you.'" Forner climbed back
up the mountain using a network of tree roots. His wife was home that
evening when, she says, she "heard a small voice in my brain say, 'Gary
fell, but he's okay.'"

In 1984 Barbara
Kahn-Langer of Scotts Valley, California, was scheduled for brain surgery
to implant a radioactive seed in an otherwise untreatable tumour. As
she waited on a hospital-trolley outside the operating room, she remembered
an experience she had three months before, following exploratory surgery
that confirmed the malignancy. When she had regained consciousness,
"my entire vision was full of this huge, golden being," she says. "I
was being held in the arms of this being. I was swathed head to foot,
like a baby, in a golden cloth." Kahn-Langer never had the second operation.
Her astonished doctor arrived with the CAT scan and told her: "Barbara,
you cheated me out of $4,000 -- the tumour is gone!" Since then, she
says she has had the ability to see angels.

Kahn-Langer's
partner David Sandler has his own miraculous story to tell. In 1974,
he was diagnosed with lymphoma and given three years to live. By 1977,
he lay in the hospital, close to death. But then Sandler heard a loud
voice singing a Hebrew song he'd known as a child: "Hear O Israel, the
Lord my God, the Lord is One." At that moment, he says, "I moved out
of my body up to the ceiling. I felt that love I had for God when I
was a child. The word ecstasy comes to mind -- I was as happy as I could
be. Then I started sinking back, and it was a shock -- the body I left
is not the one I came back to." Later, tests proved that Sandler's body
was cancer-free.

When a powerful
storm hit the 53-foot yacht that Donna Terody and her husband, Peter,
were sailing from Palm Beach, Florida, to the Bahamas in July 1992,
she was sure she was going to die. In fact, Terody wanted to die. She
had suffered from painful kidney problems since the age of four, and
had become virtually bedridden. During the storm, she prayed: "God,
just make it quick and painless." But then she felt a pull upward: "There
was a brilliant white light," she said. "Entering it, I was overwhelmed
with a feeling of peace and tranquility. Several angels emerged and
floated toward me, filling me with their healing light." Terody felt
herself falling back toward her body. "I'm dead," she thought. But a
voice told her, "You still have work to do. You have to go back." When
Terody woke up, she was facing a gigantic angel. "I begged him, 'Please
take me back.'" He vanished but left her with a profound sense of well-being.
"The angels healed me. They sent me back to paint angels." Since then,
she has been creating pastel images which she says are designed to comfort
others, and help people have their own angelic encounters.